Discovery Made In Central Park, Found Hidden Cave That Was Sealed For Disturbing Reason

New York City is covered with a rich history that draws curious visitors from all around the world. There is so much to uncover. But, aside from the usual tourist attractions, it appears that even people who live in the city learn something new every day!

Since 1857, the world-famous Central Park has given tourists and city dwellers alike a private getaway from the hustle and bustle of Manhattan. The park stretches so big, that no matter how many times you visit, there are always new spots left to find. A few of these places even hold deep, dark secrets from a bygone era…

While The Ramble, as it’s known, may appear to be the most natural place in the city it only appears that way thanks to the efforts of Central Park’s planners Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux, as well as the original builders of the Park who put in countless hours constructing a landscape that would seem rustic and remote. But for all their hard work, Central Park has changed. Like everything else in New York City the Park is constantly evolving, but if you know just where to look you can still find traces of its original features. One of the more interesting cases is that of the long-lost Ramble Cave.
The Ramble Cave was not part of Olmsted and Vaux’s ‘Greensward Plan’, their design for what would become Central Park. They did lay out the Ramble, complete with paths and trees, but to construct their artificial wilderness required a lot of construction and excavation. It was during one such dig that a large deposit of “rich mould” was found in a small bay on the north side of The Lake (‘mould’ in this case being extremely fertile soil, not what you find on bread that’s been sitting on your counter for too long). The mould was carried away, cart-full by cart-full, revealing a narrow cavity, at water level on the lake-side and sloping uphill thirty feet or so to the north, meeting up with a planned path just to the east of the Ramble Arch.

While the cavity was certainly an interesting find, it didn’t quite fit the look that Olmsted and Vaux were going for, nor was it easily accessible from the elevated lake-side trails. To solve the first problem, several large rocks were set on top of the eastern wall with more stones set into the hill beside the north exit, giving the impression that they had slid down naturally.

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Near the southern exit, by the Lake, rough stones were laid out to form a narrow staircase leading from the lake-side path down into the cave, with a border of larger stones hiding the stairs from view unless you are above it.

A little over a hundred years ago the cave used to be a popular attraction in the Park, with one early guidebook calling it “a great attraction to boys and girls, and hardly less to many children of a larger growth.”
Unfortunately, as time went on there is evidence that it was also a popular spot for trouble.

In 1904 a man was found near the steps, shot in the chest, he was supposedly the victim of a suicide attempt (the man, Samuel L. Dana, would recover, but the incident and its mysterious aftermath would set off a media frenzy).
Then to make matters worse in October, 1929 the Times reported that 335 men had been arrested in the Park that year alone for what they generously called “annoying women”, with the Ramble Cave held out as a particularly popular spot.

Then sometime around 1930, the Cave was sealed off. The entrance near the lake was simply bricked up while the opening by the Ramble Arch was more elaborately sealed and covered over with dirt to make it appear as just another hillside in the Ramble.

If you go there you will still be able to see the steps by the Lake. Sadly, unless you know of their existence they, and the Cave, they are the easiest things in the world to walk past, blissfully unaware of this once lovely feature of a young Central Park.

In 2008 my life changed when Barack Obama came into my front yard on a campaign stop. I asked him why he wanted to raise taxes, and he said that he wanted to “spread the wealth.” Since then, I have gained a national following as “Joe the Plumber” and now travel the country speaking and encouraging other everyday folks to get involved in the political process.